St. Clare is the little plant of St. Francis, as she called herself. A blog to my call to become a Poor Clare Colettine. If St. Clare was a "little plant", I am a scraggly weed.
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Friday, December 21, 2012
"The heavenly babe suffers and cries in the crib..."
"The heavenly babe suffers and cries in the crib so that for us suffering would be sweet, meritorious and accepted. He deprives himself of everything, in order that we may learn from him the renunciation of worldly goods and comforts. He is satisfied with humble and poor adorers, to encourage us to love poverty, and to prefer the company of the little and simple rather than the great ones of the world.
This celestial child, all meekness and sweetness, wishes to impress in our hearts by his example these sublime virtues, so that from a world that is torn and devastated an era of peace and love may spring forth. Even from the moment of his birth he reveals to us our mission, which is to scorn that which the world loves and seeks.
Oh let us prostrate ourselves before the manger, and along with the great St. Jerome, who was enflamed with the love of the infant Jesus, let us offer him all our hearts without reserve. Let us promise to follow the precepts which come to us from the grotto of Bethlehem, which teach us that everything here below is vanity of vanities, nothing but vanity."
- St. Padre Pio
In Defense of the Virgin Birth - Nativity Movie Correction
Fr Angelo Mary Geiger F.I. explains the Dogma of the Virgin Birth-http://airmaria.com/2006/12/01/new-line-cinemas-the-nativity-story-and-the-vi...
The Annunciation - Pope Benedict
"It
is fitting, during these last days of Advent, to consider the faith of
Mary, the Virgin Mother of Christ. At the Annunciation, the angel
Gabriel greets Mary with an invitation to rejoice because the Lord is
with her. This joy is that of the messianic hope of God’s people, the
daughter of Zion, now being fulfilled in her. It is also the fruit of
the grace which fills Mary’s heart and shapes her obedience to God’s
word. Mary’s faith, like that of Abraham, combines complete trust in the
Lord’s promises with a certain “unknowing”. In her life Mary knew, as
we do, that God’s will can seem at times obscure and far from our
expectations; it involves embracing the mystery of the Cross. It is
significant that at the Annunciation Mary ponders in her heart the
meaning of the Angel’s message. Her example reminds us that faith, while
fully obedient to the Lord’s will, also must seek daily to discern,
understand and accept that will."
-Pope Benedict XVI (12/19/12)
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